608
608
Nov 5, 2012
11/12
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WUSA
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the pattern started coming out of high school in chico, california, at 5'11", 165 pounds. i'm told, aaron, that you still have some of your football scholarship rejection letters from college. >> rodgers: i do. >> pelley: why do you keep them? >> rodgers: i like to remember where i came from and kind of the journey that i've been on. >> pelley: do you remember what the coach said from purdue? >> rodgers: i remember the letter. i still have the letter in a place that i can look at it from time to time. >> pelley: i'm told the quote on that letter from purdue is, "good luck with your attempt at a college football career." >> rodgers: i don't think there's any direct malice in that. but it wasn't a very favorable letter. >> pelley: no favor from a division one school, or d-2 or d-3. rodgers told us he thought about quitting football until he met craig rigsbee, head coach at b.c.-- butte college, a two-year junior college near rodgers' home. >> craig rigsbee: i said, "hey, you know, you've got to give this a chance. you come out to our place and all you need is a chance." i sa
the pattern started coming out of high school in chico, california, at 5'11", 165 pounds. i'm told, aaron, that you still have some of your football scholarship rejection letters from college. >> rodgers: i do. >> pelley: why do you keep them? >> rodgers: i like to remember where i came from and kind of the journey that i've been on. >> pelley: do you remember what the coach said from purdue? >> rodgers: i remember the letter. i still have the letter in a...
375
375
Nov 5, 2012
11/12
by
KPIX
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eye 375
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the pattern started coming out of high school in chico, california, at 5 foot 11, 165 pounds. >> i'm told aaron, that you still have some of your football scholarship rejection letters from college. >> i do. >> why dow keep them? >> i like to remember where i came from, and kind of the journey i've been on. >> do you remember what the coach said from purdue. >> i remember the letter. i still have the letter in a place that i can look at from time to time. >> i'm told the quote on that letter from purdue is good luck with your attempt at a college football career. >> i don't think there is any direct mall nis that. but but it wasn't very favorable letter. >> no favor from a division 1 school or d-2 or d-3. rogers told us he thought about quitting football until he met craig rigsby, head coach at bc, butte college, a two year junior college near rogers home. >> i said hey, you know, you've got to give this a chance. you come out to our place and all you need is a chance. i said i think you will get bigger, stronger, faster. your grades are there, are you smart, intelligent. get on a bi
the pattern started coming out of high school in chico, california, at 5 foot 11, 165 pounds. >> i'm told aaron, that you still have some of your football scholarship rejection letters from college. >> i do. >> why dow keep them? >> i like to remember where i came from, and kind of the journey i've been on. >> do you remember what the coach said from purdue. >> i remember the letter. i still have the letter in a place that i can look at from time to time....
94
94
Nov 22, 2012
11/12
by
CNBC
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eye 94
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um, i grew up in new york, and now i live in california, right? those are really kind of basic, important things. >> under the bio: his latest photos, posted by him or his friends. it's like a running ticker tape of his life. every day, a staggering 100 million photos are uploaded onto the site. lots of photos on the-- right away. >> people love photos. >> yeah. >> photos originally weren't that big of a part of the idea for facebook, but we just found that people really liked them, so we built out this functionality. >> a dozen engineers and designers worked on the new page in this war room... >> cool. >> empty plates and toothpaste tubes by their keyboards. they raced against a clock right there telling them how much time was left to complete each high-priority task. >> we want it to be awesome. >> they came up with a new section on the left. you can now list the important people in your life--mom, dad, sister, sister, sister, girlfriend. another new feature pulls up a history of your relationship with any of your facebook friends. >> you can se
um, i grew up in new york, and now i live in california, right? those are really kind of basic, important things. >> under the bio: his latest photos, posted by him or his friends. it's like a running ticker tape of his life. every day, a staggering 100 million photos are uploaded onto the site. lots of photos on the-- right away. >> people love photos. >> yeah. >> photos originally weren't that big of a part of the idea for facebook, but we just found that people really...
171
171
Nov 21, 2012
11/12
by
CNBC
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eye 171
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this one was a fugitive, having jumped bail on a california burglary charge. another had been arrested for shoplifting just four months earlier and deported. but somehow, she got back into the united states. because shoplifters are not considered serious criminals, they rarely spend much time in jail. >> these groups predetermine and have plans if somebody is arrested. if a team of eight goes out, and two of those people are arrested, it's the responsibility of the other six to get the money together to bail them out and get them back out on the street. >> then, he says, they disappear, traveling to another city, or assuming a new identity. the few cops who follow these groups say they have effectively carved out a criminal niche for themselves, exploiting a justice system that lets people who commit property crimes off easily. what percentage of the time were you caught? >> we can say once a year. >> and you worked every day. >> five days a week. >> this professional shoplifter from chile became a confidential informant for the new york task force when they t
this one was a fugitive, having jumped bail on a california burglary charge. another had been arrested for shoplifting just four months earlier and deported. but somehow, she got back into the united states. because shoplifters are not considered serious criminals, they rarely spend much time in jail. >> these groups predetermine and have plans if somebody is arrested. if a team of eight goes out, and two of those people are arrested, it's the responsibility of the other six to get the...
757
757
Nov 19, 2012
11/12
by
CNBC
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eye 757
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michael burry, a california physician with only one good eye. uncomfortable dealing with patients, burry quit medicine and started a hedge fund in cupertino. beginning in 2003, he turned to something that no one else in america was doing: reading and analyzing the pools of risky subprime mortgage loans that wall street had been buying up and bundling into highly profitable mortgage-backed securities, which they were selling to investors around the world. >> i called up the prospectuses, and i read the prospectuses, and i looked at these pools. i could see the credit standards within these pools deteriorating just quarter to quarter. >> how could you tell that? >> there was essentially crappier mortgages being put into these pools, and it didn't seem investors seemed to care, and it didn't seem the ratings agencies seemed to care. >> do you think many people read these prospectuses? >> i think the lawyers that put them together...[laughs] to an extent, maybe. >> do you think the executives at the big wall street firms who were issuing these bonds
michael burry, a california physician with only one good eye. uncomfortable dealing with patients, burry quit medicine and started a hedge fund in cupertino. beginning in 2003, he turned to something that no one else in america was doing: reading and analyzing the pools of risky subprime mortgage loans that wall street had been buying up and bundling into highly profitable mortgage-backed securities, which they were selling to investors around the world. >> i called up the prospectuses,...
125
125
Nov 28, 2012
11/12
by
CNBC
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eye 125
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. >> what's the average waiting time for someone in california waiting for a liver transplant? >> it's probably realistically three years, and it could be much longer. >> not for tadamasa goto, who got a liver in just six weeks. california attorney larry eisenberg finds that surprising, especially since goto was number 80 on the waiting list. >> it should not be possible that an unsavory character from out of the country with ties to organized crime comes into the united states and gets a priority and obtains a transplant. >> these two families, eisenberg's clients, both lost loved ones waiting for livers at another transplant center in the same area. salvador ceja was number two on the waiting list. john rader was number five. do you think, for one second, that this was legitimate, that they stood in line and waited just like your husband did? >> absolutely not. >> no? >> absolutely not. no, because nobody gets a liver that quickly. >> i think they were playing god. now i think they were picking and choosing whoever they wanted to give a liver to. >> so in your minds, what was
. >> what's the average waiting time for someone in california waiting for a liver transplant? >> it's probably realistically three years, and it could be much longer. >> not for tadamasa goto, who got a liver in just six weeks. california attorney larry eisenberg finds that surprising, especially since goto was number 80 on the waiting list. >> it should not be possible that an unsavory character from out of the country with ties to organized crime comes into the united...
183
183
Nov 14, 2012
11/12
by
CNBC
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eye 183
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california has a credit rating approaching junk status. it spends more money on public employee pensions than it does on the state university system. arizona is so desperate, it sold off the state capitol, supreme court building, and legislative chambers to a group of investors and now leases the buildings from their new owner. then there's new jersey. it had the highest taxes in the country, a $10 billion deficit, and a depressed economy when first-year governor chris christie took office. but after looking at the books, he decided to walk away from a long-planned and much-needed project with new york and the federal government to build a rail tunnel into manhattan. it would have helped the economy and given employment to 6,000 construction workers. lots of jobs. >> yeah. i canceled it. i mean, listen, the bottom line is, i don't have the money. and you know what? i can't pay people for those jobs if i don't have the money to pay them. where am i getting the money? i don't have it. i literally don't have it. >> this is going on all over t
california has a credit rating approaching junk status. it spends more money on public employee pensions than it does on the state university system. arizona is so desperate, it sold off the state capitol, supreme court building, and legislative chambers to a group of investors and now leases the buildings from their new owner. then there's new jersey. it had the highest taxes in the country, a $10 billion deficit, and a depressed economy when first-year governor chris christie took office. but...